U.S. needs draw foreign nurses away

Daily Pennsylvanian, PA
Feb 1, 2005

U.S. needs draw foreign nurses away
Students, faculty lend a hand in retaining medical professionals in
developing nations
By jennie wissner

While some students think that “brain drain” refers to the way they
feel after finals week, the term has a much more devastating meaning
for Penn Nursing doctoral student Lusine Poghosyan.
Although Poghosyan, an Armenian native, is currently studying in
Philadelphia, she will soon journey back to her home country, where
she will be the first nurse in Armenia with a Ph.D.

There, she hopes to improve health care and reverse the effects of
brain drain, which results from the efforts of developed countries,
like the United States, to combat their own nursing shortages by
recruiting nurses from developing countries. Many nations tapped for
nurses, such as Armenia, are crippled by the nursing brain drain
because they lack qualified staff.

“I’m so interested to be involved in reforms in nursing … to help
Armenia move forward,” Poghosyan said.

After graduating from Penn, Poghosyan will teach more advanced
nursing education programs than Armenia traditionally offers. She
also hopes to start an administrative career in health care to
strengthen her influence on the Armenian nursing community.

Her priority is “to go back, work and enjoy my life there. I’m
working towards meeting that goal,” she said.

“I care a lot about [Armenia] and the people in it, and that is where
I think I can be helpful. I have friends and family there, and that
is my place,” Poghosyan said.

Linda Aiken, a registered nurse and the director of the Center for
Health Outcomes and Policy Research, cited two causes for the brain
drain in developing countries.

One is that “developed countries like the U.S. are not producing as
many nurses as they need, and probably not using nurses effectively,”
Aiken said.

Secondly, she said that “nursing has been underdeveloped in many
parts of world.”

Several push-and-pull factors draw international students from their
home countries into the United States, perpetuating the global
nursing shortage.

According to Aiken, factors that drive people from their home
countries include a lack of jobs for existing nurses due to a poor
economy, a poorly resourced health care system and unsafe working
conditions.

Poghosyan said that there is a high rate of unemployment in Armenia.

She also added that Armenia conducts no nursing research and that no
nurses in Armenia attain respectable administrative positions.
Because many Armenian nurses receive only a minimal amount of
training, hospitals there lack quality healthcare.

According to Poghosyan, nurses in Armenia perform more technical and
menial tasks. Physicians, not nurses, handle family and patient
education, if they pay attention to it at all.

“I’d say this is not a positive effect,” Poghosyan said. “It’s not
fair that [nurses in Armenia] do not have a voice in their own work.”

Aiken said factors that draw nurses to the United States include high
salaries, higher standards of living, respect for professional
nurses, excellent health care and the opportunities to expand
education and training.

Salimah Meghani, a doctoral student in the Nursing School and a
Pakistani native, said that a nurse on average makes “$200 a month”
in her home country. The same job in the United States can earn a
nurse up to “$3,400 in one month,” Meghani said.

According to Aiken, one issue of high concern is the migration of
nurses from Africa to the United States, which has hindered the
progress of the fight against AIDS.

“The single biggest reason why we haven’t made more advances in AIDS
[in Africa] … has been because of shortage,” Aiken said.

In Botswana, for instance, AIDS victims could not receive
antiretroviral therapy due to a shortage of health personnel.

In order to balance the global health care work force, Aiken advised
that developed countries simultaneously step up their domestic supply
of nurses and invest in nursing education around the world.

“The U.S. is using nurses trained abroad because they don’t want to
invest money in training,” Aiken said. “Until [developed countries]
develop health research policies that enable them to train enough
doctors and nurses to meet their own needs, the shortage will never
be eliminated.”

Additionally, nations short on nurses need immediate relief from
countries like the United States.

Leaders in health care should “invest in education in [developing]
countries so they have a bigger infrastructure for education and
discover other ways … to retain nurses,” Aiken said.

Aiken also added that the United States should use its resources to
educate foreign nurses on its own soil and then encourage them to
return to their home countries.

Poghosyan, unlike many foreign nurses, has decided to return to her
home country. But what does she think about those who do not return?

“I can’t judge those people, because I used to work with people who
did not have jobs, Poghosyan said. “I know how hard it is.”

She also added that if health care systems fail to provide
employment, nurses have a right to find the best way to live.

As a solution, Poghosyan feels that all countries “should think about
the nurses in their own country and create an environment so these
people will develop themselves and their own careers.”

Russian, Iranian, Azeri railway ministers to meet

RIA Novosti, Russia
Feb 1, 2005

RUSSIAN, IRANIAN, AZERI RAILWAY MINISTERS TO MEET

MOSCOW, February 1, (RIA Novosti) – The Russian, Iranian and Azeri
Railway Ministers will meet in Baku February 6-10, Iran’s Ambassador
to Russia Gholamreza Shafei said at a news conference in Moscow.

Mr. Shafei added that an appropriate agreement was signed last year
and provided for the creation of a branch-line that will link the
Iranian and Azerbaijan railways and, then, the Russian railways.

“The functioning of this railway will contribute to the economic
growth of Iran, Russia and Azerbaijan,” he said.

Mr. Shafei reminded the audience that the railway that existed in the
USSR that linked it to Iran, crossed the territory of Armenia and
Azerbaijan. However, in confrontational conditions between the
Armenian and Azerbaijani sides, that railway “is practically not
functioning now.”

Mr. Shafei also said the head of the Russian Chamber of Commerce and
Industry, Yevgeny Primakov, will visit Iran on February 11-13.

“This visit will contribute to the intensification of trade between
our countries,” Mr. Shafei said.

Chess: Sargissian assumes control in Gibraltar

ABS CBN News, Philippines
Feb 1, 2005

Sargissian assumes control in Gibraltar

By MANNY BENITEZ
TODAY Chess Columnist

Armenian Grandmaster Gabriel Sargissian (2602) outfought Asian
champion Krishnan Sasikiran (2657) of India in a sixth-round, 64-move
marathon to seize the solo lead in the Gibtele.com Masters chess
championship in the British colony of Gibraltar off Spain.

Playing White, Sargissian, who turns 22 on Thursday, had 5.0 points
from six games, just half a point ahead of nine other big stars that
included the top seed, world No. 10 Alexei Shirov of Spain, and new
US champion Hikaru Nakamura, 17.

Among the other runners-up were two former world junior champions,
Emil Sutovsky of Israel, who won the under-20 crown in 1996, and
Sargissian’s compatriot, Lev Aronian, who did it in 2002.

With his loss, Sasikiran, 24, one of the early favorites, slid down
to a tie for 11th to 29th with 18 others who each had 4.0 points.

Sargissian employed the Fianchetto variation against Sasikiran’s
Gruenfeld Defense, and managed to advance his a-pawn to the sixth
rank early on.

Gaining a big plus in mid-game complications, Sargissian soon was the
exchange up and when the end came, he had a king plus rook and pawn
against the Asian champion’s king with bishop plus two pawns.

Sasikiran resigned when he realized he could not stop White’s rook
from gobbling up his a7 pawn to clear the way for a new queen.

Meanwhile, former Cuban champion Lenier Dominguez and former world
title candidate Boris Gelfand of Israel won their first games to take
the lead in the Bermuda International, a yearly event in the former
British colony miles off the US East Coast.

Reigning world junior champion Pent Harikrishna held Giovani Vescovi
of Brazil to a draw with Black in 43 moves of a Ruy Lopez in the
third pair of the six-GM field.

Dominguez had White in downing Andrei Volokitin of Ukraine in 46
moves of a Sicilian Paulsen, while Gelfand had Black in beating
Bartlomiej Macieja of Poland.

Tehran: 26th anniversary of victory of Islamic Revolution celebrated

Mehr News Agency, Iran
Feb 1, 2005

26th anniversary of victory of Islamic Revolution celebrated in
Armenia

TEHRAN, Feb. 1 (MNA) — The 26th anniversary of the victory of the
Islamic Revolution is being celebrated in Armenia.

According to the Public Relations Office of the Islamic Culture and
Relations Organization (ICRO), several programs, including
exhibitions and poetry nights with the participation of Iranian
scholars, are scheduled for the Ten-Day Dawn celebrations.

* Exhibition of Iranian miniature works underway in Moscow

An exhibition of Iranian contemporary miniature works opened in
Moscow on January 31.

Over 50 works created by Amir Tahmasebi, Amir-Hussein Aqamiri, and
other Iranian artists are on display.

Russian and Iranian officials and a group of Iranian artists attended
the opening ceremony of the exhibition, which will run through until
February 6.

* Iranian Arts Room to open at Armenian National Museum

The new Iranian Arts Room of the Armenian National Museum in Yerevan
is to open on February 3.

Iranian art and cultural works will be put on display permanently in
the museum’s new section.

ANKARA: French FM Barnier: Make peace with your own history

Milliyet, Turkey
Feb 1, 2005

FRENCH FM BARNIER: `MAKE PEACE WITH YOUR OWN HISTORY’

Responding the questions of NTV on Turkey’s EU membership bid and the
allegations on the so-called Armenian genocide, French Foreign
Minister Michel Barnier stated that the negotiations between Turkey
and the European Union were set to begin on Oct. 3, 2005. `The
results of the negotiations will completely depend upon Turkey’s
performance,’ he said. Upon a question on the so-called Armenian
genocide, Barnier said that when a country joined the ranks of the
EU, it was obliged to accept the principle of making peace with other
countries. `You will have to make peace with other countries as a EU
member,’ he added. `This is what we exactly did with the Germans to
develop a complete European project. Moreover, you will have to make
peace with your own history too. I guess Turkey should work on its
historical memory to deal with the Armenian issue.’ /Milliyet/

Crimes against Humanity

KurdistanObserver.com
Jan 30 2004

Crimes against Humanity

Remembering Holocaust and Denouncing Hatred at Museum of Tolerance,
Los Angeles, CA on January 30th, 2005

Sixty years ago, this week, on January 27, the Allied Forces
liberated Auschwitz and freed what was remained of millions of people
who were condemned to be annihilated for being of a different ethnic
background. The simple goodness of mankind, which creates the true
and miraculous spirit of liberty and freedom in humanity, delivered
the gift of liberation on the day of January 27, 1945 to the
survivors of the Holocaust.

But throughout the recent history, our humanity has witnessed other
acts of crimes that parallel Auschwitz in intention but only
differing in scale. Bombing of various refugee camps, Genocide of
Armenians, Pol Pot’s crimes in Cambodia, ethnic cleansing in Rwanda,
Sudan, and Bosnia, Killing of Kurds in Iraq, Iran, Turkey, and Syria
in general and chemical bombing of Halabja in particular, killing of
civilians in the world trade center, beheadings in Iraq,
suicide/homicide bombing in the world and particularly in Israel and
Iraq, and torture and abuse of political prisoners around the world
are just few examples. These acts are to be remembered as acts of
crimes against humanity, so the power of goodness in humanity
prevents their recurrences.

Since 1945 the Jewish community has much recovered but remained the
victim of hatred and anti-Semitism in various places of the world.
More tragic is that this community has remained in a chronic conflict
with its Semitic cousins over the rights of Palestinians. A major
obstacle has been terrorizing Jewish civilians by suicide/homicide
bombing in Israel and preventing Palestinians from fulfilling their
dreams of independence with peaceful means. Fortunately through the
efforts of peace activists, finally Palestinians elected a new leader
democratically to negotiate resolving the conflict via democratic and
peaceful means.

While Palestinians are making progress, Iraqis are becoming the
victims of criminal behaviors such as suicide/homicide bombings. Many
of us did not want the war in Iraq, but wished for the removal of
Saddam in a nonviolent way. Just because we couldn’t stop the war, it
does not mean we should stop working for peace and freedom to return
to that country. We hope this upcoming election would bring peace and
justice to that country and to the rest of the Middle East. We hope
that the Kurds like other ethnicities in the Middle East gain their
right of self determinations.

There are many difficulties and despairs to overcome, but as
liberation of Auschwitz has proven, we must not give up rejecting
crimes against humanity in all its violent forms including
suicide/homicide bombing of civilians in this remembrance day, so we
could create otherwise, what could be a better, more peaceful and a
secure world for the fellowship of mankind.

Board of Directors

Kurdish-American Education Society

Southern California

January 27, 2005

Chess: Sasikiran stunned by Gabriel Sargissen

Rediff, India
Jan 30 2004

Sasikiran stunned by Gabriel Sargissen

January 31, 2005 21:23 IST

Overnight joint-leader Grandmaster Krishnan Sasikiran slipped to
joint 10th spot after a shocking defeat at the hands of GM Gabriel
Sargissen of Armenia in the sixth round of the master’s section in
the Gibtele.Com chess festival in Gibraltar.

With four rounds still to come in the event, Sargissen emerged the
sole leader with five points. He is followed by top seed Alexei
Shirov of Spain, Hikaru Nakamura of the United States, Kiril Georgiev
of Bulgaria, Levon Aronian of Armenia, Alexey dreev of Russia, Zahar
Efimenko of Ukraine, Vasilios Kotronias of Greece and the Israeli duo
of Emil Sutovsky and Boris Avrukh, who all have 4.5 points apiece.

Sasikiran is next in line with four points and giving him company
among others are Ian Rogers of Australia, Alexander Areshcheko of
Ukraine and Kevin Spraggett of Canada.

The highest-rated Indian after Viswanathan Anand will meet Sweidish
GM Pia Cramling in the next round and a victory there can still put
Sasikiran back in the race for the title.

Sasikiran was a little over-ambitious in the middle game against
Sargissen. Playing the Neo-Grunfeld opening as black, Sasikiran had a
balanced position in the middle game and he tried to create imbalance
with quite original planning and it was on the 28th move that the
game took a decisive turn as Sargissen went ahead with complications,
accepting a temporary pawn sacrifice by his opponent.

Sasikiran had optical advantage for some time during the game when he
found fine attacking manoeuvres to leave Sargissen in trouble.

However, as the position simplified, Sargissen emerged on top as
Sasikiran was subjected to a typical case of divided forces, with
little co-ordination. Sasikiran still gave a tough fight but the dye
was already cast. The game lasted 64 moves.

Interestingly, apart from Sargissen, Greek Vasilios Kotronias was the
only winner on the top 10 boards while all the remaining games ended
in draws.

Kotronias defeated Bragi Thorfinnsson of Iceland in a fine positional
game arising out of a Sicilian defence.

Kotronias got a vice-like grip right after the opening and consistent
play thereafter netted him the full point after 37 moves.

It was a tame affair on the top board as former World junior champion
Kiril Georgiev of Bulgaria played it safe against
Latvian-born-Spaniard Alexei Shirov. Playing just too safe against
the Slav, Georgiev employed a tested variation and had no troubles in
maintaining the balance in this 30-move encounter.

United States’ champion Hikaru Nakamura drew with Levon Aronian of
Armenia in an interesting game. Playing white, Nakamura accepted the
Marshall gambit and then showed resourceful play in the middle game
to come out a little better. However, Aronian was quite up to the
task in defence and after tactical manoeuvring, ensured the draw.

In other important games of the day, Alexei Dreev was held to a draw
by Avrukh while Emil Sutovsky had to share the point with Efimenko.

Important results round 6:

Kiril Georgiev (Bul, 4.5) drew with Alexei Shirov (Esp, 4.5); Alexey
Dreev (Rus, 4.5) drew with Boris Avrukh (Isr, 4.5); Hikaru Nakamura
(Usa, 4.5) drew with Levon Aronian (Arm, 4.5); Emil Sutovsky (Isr,
4.5) drew with Zahar Efimenko (Ukr, 4.5); Gabriel Sargissen (Arm, 5)
beat Krishnan Sasikiran (Ind, 4); Pia Cramling (Swe, 4) drew with Ian
Rogers (Aus, 4); Kevin Spraggett (Can, 4) drew with Colin Mcnab (Sco,
4); Vasilios Kotronias (Gre, 4.5) beat Bragi Thorfinnssson (Isl,
3.5); Evgeny Postny (Isr, 4) drew with Hamad Al-Tamimi (Qat, 4); A.
R. Saleh Jasim (Uae, 4) drew with Jonathan Speelman (Eng, 4);
Kateryna Lahno (Ukr, 4) drew with Peter Wells (Eng, 4); Stefan
Kristjansson (Isl, 3.5) drew with Mohamed Al Sayed (Qat, 4); Joanna
Dworakowska (Pol, 3) lost to Alexander Areshchenko (Ukr, 4); Juan
Manuel Bellon Lopez (Esp, 3) lost to Hicham Hamdouchi (Mar, 4);
Sergey Erenburg (Isr, 3.5) drew with Richard Pert (Eng, 3.5); Mark
Hebden (Eng, 3) lost to Sergio Estremera (Esp, 4); Gabriel Del Rio
(Esp, 4) beat Bjorn Thorfinnsson (Isl, 3).

Armenian GDP enjoys growth

RosBusinessConsulting, Russia –
Jan 31, 2005

Armenian GDP enjoys growth

RBC, 31.01.2005, Erevan 17:32:05.The Armenian economy expanded
10.1 percent to USD3.5bn in 2004, the National Statistics Service of
the republic reported. Its GDP grew 17.8 percent in December. The
annual increase in GDP is due to a 17.2-percent growth of the
construction sector, a 16.8-percent jump in personal income, a
14.5-percent expansion in the agricultural sector. Industrial
production was 2.1 percent higher. Electrical energy production
advanced 9.5 percent. Armenia boosted its foreign trade by 5.1
percent to USD2.1bn. Retail trade advanced 10.5 percent. Personal
expenditures were 16.5 percent higher.

The December GDP jump is due to personal income being swollen
by 91.4 percent from November. Personal spending showed a
78.8-percent monthly growth.

The face of war: Gianikian and Ricci Lucchi’s Oh! Uomo

Village Voice, NY
Jan 31, 2005

Atrocity Exhibition
An archival assemblage of World War I horrors ponders the political
power of violent images

by J. Hoberman

The face of war: Gianikian and Ricci Lucchi’s Oh! Uomo
photo: Anthology Film Archives
Oh! Uomo
Directed by Yervant Gianikian and Angela Ricci Lucchi
February 3 through 9
Anthology Film Archives

“The appetite for pictures showing bodies in pain is as keen, almost,
as the desire for ones that show bodies naked,” Susan Sontag wrote in
Regarding the Pain of Others. The success of The Passion of the
Christ notwithstanding, that sounds a bit hyperbolic – still, if Sontag
is correct, there should be a line around the block at Anthology Film
Archives this week for Oh! Uomo (Oh! Man).
The latest archival assemblage by Milan-based filmmakers Yervant
Gianikian and Angela Ricci Lucchi, Oh! Uomo is the final panel in
their World War I triptych. The previous films dealt with the
massacre of civilian populations, but Oh! Uomo is more viscerally
horrifying, focusing largely on the effects of modern warfare on the
human body. The movie’s title is taken from Leonardo da Vinci and so
is its premise, namely that images of suffering will promote empathy.
Da Vincian too is the scientific interest in human anatomy.

War has no rationale here. Oh! Uomo naturalizes carnage in its first
shot with graceful biplanes wheeling through a bird-filled sky. (Even
before World War I broke out, Italy had used this new
invention – another da Vinci idea – as the means to bomb the restive
natives of their colony Libya.) The arrival of a military band cues
music: Ghosts already, soldiers on horseback are shown riding out of
the stables toward the battlefield, while priests make an offering.
The officers, shown in negative, include Mussolini (perhaps a
flash-forward). Then shells explode and the earth is consumed in the
conflagration. So much for combat.

Gianikian and Ricci Lucchi have been making archival films for nearly
20 years – the encyclopedic actualité compilation From the Pole to the
Equator remains their most widely seen work, but their style has been
widely imitated. The couple treats each scrap of unearthed footage as
though it were a holy relic. The original film is step-printed and
slowed down to reveal fleeting expressions and gestures, as well as
to emphasize the material nature of the scratched, blotchy, fragile
celluloid stuff itself. The preciousness of the preserved footage is
underscored by color tinting. But no matter how beautiful the ruddy
gold or electric chartreuse, the effect is not exactly distancing.

“The gruesome invites us to be spectators or cowards, unable to
look,” Sontag notes in apparent self-contradiction. So it is with Oh!
Uomo, once pain arrives in the form of maimed children and starving
war orphans. Unfortunately, the filmmakers feel the need to up the
sensory ante. The choral keening that accompanies the image of one
bedridden girl escalates into a rhythmic mock wailing that grows
increasingly abusive with footage of a dead child atop a mountain of
corpses. (The filmmakers have made this mistake before – accompanying
People, Years, Life, their account of the 1915 Armenian massacres,
with a discordantly cloying requiem.) Sound is intermittent
throughout Oh! Uomo, but the movie is almost always a stronger, more
awe-inspiring experience without the presence of an editorializing
musical counter-irritant.

The underlying question, of course, is, will these sights turn people
against war? The Bush administration must think so – at least to judge
from its news management style, blocking images of American
casualties, let alone those of civilians or enemies. “The Face of
War,” the most notorious section of Ernst Friedrich’s 1924
photography collection War Against War!, documented the hideously
blasted, melted, shattered features of World War I’s wounded
survivors. (These “broken mugs,” as the French called them, also
appeared in Abel Gance’s 1938 anti-war feature J’accuse.) A similar
gallery of destroyed and reconstructed faces is at the heart of Oh!
Uomo: Eyes are surgically removed, ears repaired, jaws refastened.

The filmmakers end their terrifying exposé on a strangely positive
note with the production of heroic cyborgs. The wounded learn how to
screw on their new hands or fit into prosthetic legs. Many are
cheerful; they smile as they model their afflictions. Humanity has
successfully turned itself into an object.

,hoberman1,60625,20.html

http://www.villagevoice.com/film/0505

Karabakh leader receives OSCE delegation

RIA Novosti, Russia
Jan 31 2005

KARABAKH LEADER RECEIVES OSCE DELEGATION

YEREVAN, January 31 (RIA Novosti’s Gamlet Matevosyan) – Arkady
Gukasyan, the leader of the self-proclaimed republic of Nagorny
Karabakh, received a delegation of the Organization for Security and
Cooperation in Europe (OSCE) in his headquarters on Monday. The
delegates included the three cochairmen of the Minsk Group for the
Karabakh settlement-Yuri Merzlyakov, of Russia, Steve Mann, of the
United States, and Bernard Fassier, of France-as well as members of
the fact-finding team set up to verify Azerbaijan’s allegations that
Armenian authorities continue the settlement of “occupied Azeri
territories.”

In an interview with RIA Novosti, presidential spokespeople quoted
Mr. Gukasyan as saying that the OSCE decision to visit territories
presently under Karabakh control was a highly important one.
According to him, Karabakh authorities suggested the idea on more
than occasion in the past.

Speaking of the current situation in the Karabakh-administered
territories under OSCE monitoring, Mr. Gukasyan said his government
had no program of settling those areas. According to him, government
activity here is limited to the creation of decent living conditions
for the population and the establishment of proper control.

In order to get a fuller picture of the situation in the conflict
zone, the Karabakh leader suggested that the OSCE mission should also
visit Karabakh territories now being control by the Azeri military.

OSCE Conflict Prevention Commissioner Emily Haber, who heads the
fact-finding team, thanked the Karabakh leadership for creating
favorable conditions for her team’s work. She said the mission was
intended for a ten days’ period and that it was more technical than
political in nature.

Today, the OSCE fact-finding team is beginning to monitor the seven
Karabakh-administered regions that constitute what is known as the
security belt around the self-proclaimed republic. The aim is to find
out whether Azerbaijan has any grounds to accuse Armenia of illegally
settling these territories.